Earl Mindell’s New Vitamin Bible Reviews

Posted on : 29-05-2011 | By : chris | In : Vitamin News

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Earl Mindell’s New Vitamin Bible

  • ISBN13: 9780446561983
  • Condition: New
  • Notes: BRAND NEW FROM PUBLISHER! 100% Satisfaction Guarantee. Tracking provided on most orders. Buy with Confidence! Millions of books sold!

America’s #1 vitamin book–now with extensive new material and special sections. This classic guide has been completely updated to put the information you need at your fingertips so you can live a longer, healthier and better life. Discover:

*How to maximize the effectiveness of your vitamins/supplements and avoid problems by taking them in the right combinations

*New anti-aging vitamins and supplements that will keep your skin and body healthy and young-looking

*The art

List Price: $ 9.99

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Nature Made Calcium, Magnesium, and Zinc with Vitamin D, 100 Tablets (Pack of 3)

Posted on : 27-05-2011 | By : chris | In : Vitamin News

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Nature Made Calcium, Magnesium, and Zinc with Vitamin D, 100 Tablets (Pack of 3)

  • Three 100-count bottles (total of 300 tablets)
  • Helps build strong bones and teeth
  • Calcium strengthens bones and may help prevent osteoporosis
  • Magnesium contributes to energy production and bone health
  • Zinc aids in antioxidant processes

Nature Made Calcium, Magnesium & Zinc 3-pack/100-count

List Price: $ 17.97

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Centrum Silver, 220-Count Bottle

  • One bottle of 220 adult vitamin supplement tablets for seniors
  • Specially formulated multivitamin for people over 50, with higher levels of specific vitamins to help meet the needs of older adults
  • Centrum balances combinations of nutrients to help them work to their full potential
  • Improved formula includes lycopene, one of the ingredients in tomatoes that may help support heart health
  • Centrum is produced by Wyeth Consumer Healthcare, one of the largest over-the-counter health care products company in the world

Nutritional supplementsThis new, improved and specially-formulated multivitamin for adults was created to meet the changing nutritional needs of adults over 50. The package contains 220 tablets. It is designed for adults only; please read all label information on delivery.

List Price: $ 20.99

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Twinlab Daily One Caps Multi-Vitamin and Multi-Minerals without Iron, 180 Capsules

Posted on : 17-05-2011 | By : chris | In : Vitamin News

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Twinlab Daily One Caps Multi-Vitamin and Multi-Minerals without Iron, 180 Capsules

  • One bottle containing 180 multi-vitamin and mineral capsules
  • Contains a blend of 25 vitamins and minerals; easy to swallow and assimilate
  • Well tolerated by most highly allergic individuals; iron free; no tablet binders, coatings or colorings
  • No added flavorings, sugars, salt, artificial sweeteners, colorings, preservatives or salicylates
  • Manufactured at Twinlab’s own state-of-the-art facility

TwinLab Daily One Caps help promote healthy eyes, and provide extra Folic Acid for healthy heart. Free of the most common allergens such as yeast, rice, barley, wheat, lactose (milk sugar) and all milk and egg products, with no added flavorings, sugars, salt, artificial sweeteners, colorings, preservatives or salicylates. No iron. (These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.)

List Price: $ 43.95

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Related Vitamins Products

Vitamin D improves exercise strength for COPD patients

Posted on : 16-05-2011 | By : chris | In : Vitamin News

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High dose vitamin D helps COPD patients with improved muscle strength and exercise capacity.
Kathleen Blachard RN reports that’s the conclusion of a new finding from Belgium researchers who suggest vitamin D supplements in high doses can help patients undergoing pulmonary rehabilitation.
Breathing problems make it difficult to patients with lung disease to exercise. Adding vitamin D that is often deficient with COPD can strengthen respiratory muscles and improve exercise outcomes.
Miek Hornikx, physiotherapist and doctoral student in the department of pneumology at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in Leuven, Belgium says, “Low levels of vitamin D in the blood have been related with muscle weakness, a major target for respiratory rehabilitation and increased risk of falls.”
Hornikx explains the research team wanted to know if boosting vitamin D would help COPD patients with pulmonary rehabilitation.
High dose of vitamin D compared to placebo in study.  Fifty patients were enrolled in the study. One group was given placebo and the other vitamin D supplements. Quality of life questionnaires were submitted before and after three months of pulmonary rehab.
The participants’ respiratory and peripheral muscle strength and exercise capacity was compared before and after the study. Vitamin D levels were also measured.
The high dose of vitamin D used in the study was 100,000 IUs (international units) of vitamin D, higher than the USDA recommended allowance of 600 IUs daily for adults up to age 70 and 800 IUs daily for adults over age 70.
At the end of the study, the group given vitamin D had greater peripheral and respiratory muscle strength and higher exercise capacity than the placebo group.
Quality of life was not reported as improved. The researchers say the short duration of the study and small group might explain the lack of improvement in quality of life scores.

The study suggests adding high dose vitamin D to COPD patient’s rehabilitation program adds strength and improves exercise capacity. Longer studies are suggested to gauge whether vitamin D supplementation also improves health related quality of life.
Reported at the American Thoracic Society International Conference.

Vitamins May One Day Hitch a Ride on Corn Starch

Posted on : 15-05-2011 | By : chris | In : Vitamin News

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ScienceDaily (May 15, 2011) — Vitamins and medications may one day take rides on starch compounds creating stable vitamin-enriched ingredients and cheaper controlled-release drugs, according to Penn State food scientists.

The technique may offer drug and food companies a less expensive, more environmentally friendly alternative in creating, among other products, medications and food supplements.

In a series of experiments, researchers formed pockets with corn starch and a fatty acid ester to carry oil soluble vitamins, such as vitamin A and vitamin C, into the body, according to Gregory Ziegler, professor, food sciences.

Heat and acids can harm or destroy vitamins. The starch molecule forms a protective pocket around the vitamins as they travel through the highly acidic stomach and into the small intestines, where they can be absorbed into the blood stream.

To form the pocket, the researchers, who released their findings in a recent issue of Carbohydrate Polymers, used a type of corn starch called high amylose maize starch. When amylose comes into contact with fatty acids esters of vitamin A, for example, it creates a coil with an internal wall that repels water — hydrophobic — and an exterior wall that attracts water — hydrophilic. The oil-soluble molecules automatically move into the coil that encapsulates the medication or vitamin.

“There’s an ideal size and the real work is to get the right balance of the hydrophilic and hydrophobic properties,” said Ziegler, who worked with Ursula V. Lay Ma, graduate student, and John D. Floros, professor, food sciences.

According to Ziegler, there are several benefits for using starches as hosts for delivering drugs and vitamins. Because starches are common, biodegradable and easily absorbed by the body, using corn starch could be inexpensive and better for the environment.

The pharmaceutical industry uses other ingredients and techniques to create inclusion complexes, said Ziegler. For example, cyclodextrin complexes — donuts of sugar molecules — form in a similar way to deliver controlled-release substances, such as Ibuprofen. Ziegler said that because the cavity in starch is a different size than that of cyclodextrin, it can increase the size range of molecules that can be encapsulated.

Corn starch could be used in a variety of other applications, including those outside the pharmaceutical and food industries, such as in make-up, containers and even optical and electronic devices, according to Ziegler. “We have more work and research to do,” Ziegler said. “The trick is how can we set this up so we can do it simply.”

The Pennsylvania Agricultural Experiment Station supported the research.  The above story is reprinted (with editorial adaptations by ScienceDaily staff) from materials provided by  Penn State.

Journal Reference:

1.  Ursula V. Lay Ma, John D. Floros, Gregory R. Ziegler. Effect of starch fractions on spherulite formation and microstructure. Carbohydrate Polymers, 2011; 83 (4): 1757 DOI: 10.1016/j.carbpol.2010.10.041